I had a little different experience with an RV and thunderstorms this week.
I'm from Florida, so used to lightning. There, we unplug and in an hour or 2 it is gone, and reconnect. We are currently in Kentucky, and had storms come through off and on all day. You can try and plug in "in between" but then it starts up again, and time to unplug again. The end result was depleted batteries and the generator kicking on. This was OK at 3 PM, but not at 3 AM. So I was out at 1 AM during a short break plugged in, but watching the weather, and fortunately got enough charge to make it through the night when the T-storms were done.
I had a little different experience with an RV and thunderstorms this week.
I'm from Florida, so used to lightning. There, we unplug and in an hour or 2 it is gone, and reconnect. We are currently in Kentucky, and had storms come through off and on all day. You can try and plug in "in between" but then it starts up again, and time to unplug again. The end result was depleted batteries and the generator kicking on. This was OK at 3 PM, but not at 3 AM. So I was out at 1 AM during a short break plugged in, but watching the weather, and fortunately got enough charge to make it through the night when the T-storms were done.